The Last Post Ceremony commemorating the service of (5613) Private Albert Ernest Manley, 20th Battalion, AIF, First World War.

Places
Accession Number AWM2019.1.1.49
Collection type Film
Object type Last Post film
Physical description 16:9
Maker Australian War Memorial
Place made Australia: Australian Capital Territory, Canberra, Campbell
Date made 18 February 2019
Access Open
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright Item copyright: © Australian War Memorial
Creative Commons License This item is licensed under CC BY-NC
Copying Provisions Copyright restrictions apply. Only personal, non-commercial, research and study use permitted. Permission of copyright holder required for any commercial use and/or reproduction.
Description

The Last Post Ceremony is presented in the Commemorative area of the Australian War Memorial each day. The ceremony commemorates more than 102,000 Australians who have given their lives in war and other operations and whose names are recorded on the Roll of Honour. At each ceremony the story behind one of the names on the Roll of Honour is told. Hosted by Richard Cruise, the story for this day was on (5613) Private Albert Ernest Manley, 20th Battalion, AIF, First World War.

Film order form
Speech transcript

5613 Private Albert Ernest Manley, 20th Battalion, AIF
DOW 7 February 1917

Today we remember and pay tribute to Private Albert Ernest Manley.

Albert Manley was born in 1881 in Devonshire, England, the seventh of ten children of John and Catherine Manley. After Albert’s birth, the Manley family moved to Eltham in London. Known by his middle name of “Ernest”, Manley joined the British military, and served for 12 years as a private in the Grenadier Guards.

In 1908 Manley married Eleanor Caselton of Kent and the pair lived in London. By the beginning of the First World War, however, the couple had migrated to Australia. They were living in the Sydney suburb of Leichardt, where Albert worked for the Leichardt Municipal Council.

Albert Manley joined the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force and, due to his military experience, was soon promoted to corporal. The Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force consisted of about 1,000 soldiers and 500 sailors who were tasked with capturing German protectorates to the north of Australia in New Guinea. The force had been created extremely rapidly, and on 19 September 1914, just over a week after enlisting, Manley embarked from Sydney aboard the HMAT Berrima, bound for New Guinea.

Arriving in New Guinea, Australian troops took part in the seizure of key towns and German radio stations. Manley took part in the successful and unopposed capture of the town of Rabaul. The mission to New Guinea was the first action seen by Australian soldiers in the First World War.

Shortly before leaving Rabaul in March 1915, Manley contracted malaria, a disease that would prevent him from joining the main Australian Imperial Force until September 1916. Until he was able to enlist in the AIF, he served at a camp guarding German prisoners. In the period between his service in New Guinea and the Western Front, Manley and Eleanor had a daughter, Mary Eileen Ivy Lavain, born in April 1916.

In September 1916, cleared of malaria, Manley was finally able to depart for the war in Europe. He arrived in France in the freezing December of 1916. The 20th Infantry Battalion, of which Manley was part, occupied the Dernancourt sector of the front in the Somme region of northern France. On the night of 5 February 1917, while the 20th Battalion was in the process of moving to position behind the front line, a German aircraft dropped a bomb into a hut in which some soldiers were taking refuge.
Manley received a compound fracture to the skull and was rushed to the 5th Australian Field Ambulance. He did not recover from his wounds and died on 7 February 1917. He had been on the Western Front for just over a month. Just six days after his death, his brother Alfred set sail back home for Australia after having sustained a serious gunshot wound to his spine.

Manley was buried at Dernancourt Communal Cemetery Extension. Learning of his death, his grieving widow, now left to raise their infant daughter, wrote in the local newspaper: “My dear husband Pte A. E. Manley. A soldier and a man”.
Private Albert Ernest Manley is listed on the Roll of Honour on my right, among more than 60,000 Australians who died while serving in the First World War.

This is but one of the many stories of service and sacrifice told here at the Australian War Memorial. We now remember Private Albert Ernest Manley, who gave his life for us, for our freedoms, and in the hope of a better world.

David Sutton
Historian, Military History Section

  • Video of The Last Post Ceremony commemorating the service of (5613) Private Albert Ernest Manley, 20th Battalion, AIF, First World War. (video)